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From pollution to solutions: Insights into the sources, transport and management of plastic debris in pristine and urban rivers

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dc.contributor.author Yinan, He
dc.contributor.author Jungang, Lu
dc.contributor.author Changjun, Li
dc.contributor.author Xiaohui, Wang
dc.contributor.author Chunhua, Jiang
dc.contributor.author Lixin, Zhu
dc.contributor.author Xinyu, Bu
dc.contributor.author Khalida, Jabeen
dc.contributor.author Vo, Tran Tuan Linh
dc.contributor.author Daoji, Li
dc.date.accessioned 2025-03-20T09:09:43Z
dc.date.available 2025-03-20T09:09:43Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.identifier.uri http://tvhdh.vnio.org.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/21381
dc.description.abstract River systems are important recipients of environmental plastic pollution and have become key pathways for the transfer of mismanaged waste from the land to the ocean. Understanding the sources and fate of plastic debris, including plastic litter (>5 mm) and microplastics (MPs) (<5 mm), entering different riverine systems is essential to mitigate the ongoing environmental plastic pollution crisis. We comprehensively investigated the plastic pollution in the catchments of two rivers in the Yangtze River basin: an urban river, the Suzhou section of the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal (SZ); and a pristine rural river, the Jingmen section of the Hanjiang River (JM). The abundance of plastic pollutants in SZ was significantly higher than in JM: 0.430 ± 0.450 items/m3 and 0.003 ± 0.003 items/m3 of plastic litter in the water; 23.47 ± 25.53 n/m3 and 2.78 ± 1.55 n/m3 MPs in the water; and 218.82 ± 77.40 items/kg and 5.30 ± 1.99 items/kg of MPs in the sediment, respectively. Plastic litter and MPs were closely correlated in abundance and polymer composition. Overall, the polymer type, shape and color of MPs were dominant by polypropylene (42.5%), fragment (60.4%) and transparent (40.0%), respectively. Source tracing analysis revealed that packaging, shipping, and wastewater were the primary sources of plastic pollutants. The mantel analysis indicated that socio-economic and geospatial factors play crucial roles in driving the hotspot formation of plastic pollution in river networks. The composition of the MP communities differed significantly between the sediments and the overlying water. The urban riverbed sediments had a more pronounced pollutant ‘sink’ effect compared with the pristine rivers. These findings suggested that the modification of natural streams during urbanization may influence the transport and fate of plastic pollutants in them. Our results offer pivotal insights into effective preventive measures. vi,en
dc.language.iso en vi,en
dc.relation.ispartofseries Environmental Research, Volume 245, pp. 118024, 2024;https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.118024
dc.subject River system vi,en
dc.subject Plastic debris vi,en
dc.subject Microplastics vi,en
dc.subject Environmental plastic pollution vi,en
dc.title From pollution to solutions: Insights into the sources, transport and management of plastic debris in pristine and urban rivers vi,en
dc.type Working Paper vi,en


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